I get it. MMA fans had to change the dialogue from prefight saying "Mayweather is getting knocked out" to afterwards "McGregor isn't really a boxer". MMA fans should take the compliment that McGregor did better than expected and leave it at that.

It shows the maturity of the sport of MMA compared to boxing. When a boxer loses in the octagon, no one in boxing really gets riled up about it and realizes that they are different sports anyhow (before and after the fight), despite the gloating of mma fans as their sport is supposedly better. But when a boxer does win in the UFC (like Holm over Rousey), boxing fans give respect to their martial art of the sweet science without going overboard and saying that MMA is dead because someone who previously boxed won in a cage.

They are different sports and they don't have to be in competition - Boxing is boxing, MMA is NOT street fighting, a street fight is a street fight - MMA fans need to get out of the ideology and terminology of referring to their sport as being the closest thing to a street fight. Street fights are barbaric and immature and anything can happen. MMA is what it stands for, Mixed Martial Arts; give it respect as being that and not the disrespect of a back alley fight.

A combat sport is sadism with structure and that is art. Fighting outside of that is disgusting, and typically bullying. Self defense is needed in the outside world, but even that is a cruel act of nature as it is reflective of people fighting out of basic survival, not because they want to. Defending oneself in a sport is an art on display of two men who want to fight, exemplifying literature of the heart being written with fists and blood.

There couldn't have been a better example of a good stoppage. McGregor was exhausted and he was clearly hurt when he wobbled back from a punch on the button. He took repeated shots and was incapable of throwing back or even holding his hands up. Even the rounds before that, his punches had no power so the possibility of a "puncher's chance" was completely gone. And shortly before the stoppage, the ropes partially held him up from falling down. I've seen controversial stoppages before, but this shouldn't be one. This is almost all of the textbook reasons to stop a fight in one stoppage. Fans of McGregor should be glad that he could still walk and talk afterwards, and not in a hospital drinking through a straw.

And just to add on another hot topic about the fight: How did McGregor land more punches than Pacquiao? Because Floyd fought a totally different style than against Pacman. He's smarter than that. Pacquiao has one of the most powerful left hands, pound for pound, in the history of boxing; that's why Mayweather played defense in that fight. Floyd had the least amount of respect for the power of McGregor than he has had for an opponent in some time. He went in for the knockout and got it. He knew that Conor would tire out.

A one punch knockout is the ultimate duality of life unleashed in a split second. In that moment, a man loses consciousness under the horrible fact that he just had a piece of life taken from him while another man shows the ability - to defend himself and gain respect - in an instant act of God through the power of a fist.

But it's not all about knocking people out. Fighters must fight. That's what they do. When the bell rings, it's just two men with their hearts stripped naked. There is a beauty in that which many people don't see.

There is greatness in the ferocity of boxing.

Pugilists and boxing fans are sadists almost by default. Others just see cruelty while a sadist sees art in motion. It's about the power that you can't gain in the open world. Degenerates only fight advantageously; they are not real fighters.

You tell me how is it fair that only the bad guys get to fight?

The point of boxing is not just to knock the other guy out. That would be the same as saying the only point of hockey is scoring goals or that the point of football is just touchdowns. That is too simplistic of a viewpoint for those sports or for the sweet science.

It's about a man putting his heart on the line for the world to see. That's a fighter. You give and take respect.

In Bern, Switzerland on Epix, Wladimir Klitschko (58-3) defended his heavyweight championship in a rematch against Tony Thompson (36-3)with a TKO in round six. Thompson threw more punches than Klitschko, but was out of distance when throwing and had very few connects with very little power on them. Thompson needed to punch more aggressively to have had a chance.

Klitschko dropped the challenger in round five with a right hand to the mouth. Thompson never recovered and went down in round six from a barrage of punches. He was in the fetal postion on the canvas, but appeared more to be beaten with no hope to continue. It was a pathetic match up and Klitschko is in need of a real challenge. Klitschko did jab much less in the fight than his usual bouts.

On HBO, Nonito Donaire (29-1) continued his climb up the pound for pound ranks with a tough unanimous decision win over super bantamweight Jeffrey Mathebula (26-4-2). Donaire was the pressure fighter against his much taller opponent.

Mathebula was dropped by a left hook to the jaw at the end of round four, but he recovered well. It was a competitive bout with Donaire taking most of the rounds, but Mathebula appeared to do enough to win rounds and many thought it was closer than the judges' scores ringside. HBO reported that Mathebula may have had his jaw broke near the end of the fight.

In the HBO co-feature, super middleweight Kelly Pavlik (40-2) continued his comeback trail with a solid unanimous decision win over Will Rosinsky (16-2) in the ten round bout. Early in the fight, Pavlik knocked him down in round two with a short right hand to the chin. Rosinsky has fast hands and moves well, but he just did not have quite enough to win very many rounds. Pavlik did have a bruised ear and a cut over his eye after the bout.

On Fox Sports Network, light middleweight Jesus Soto Karass (26-7-3) defeated Euri Gonzalez (20-3-1) by TKO in round five. Gonzalez was dropped by a right hand and Karass kept on him until the referee halted the bout.

In the UFC 148 main event, Anderson Silva won the rematch with Chael Sonnen to retain his middleweight championship ,this time by TKO in round two. Silva started slow and Sonnen dominated in the opening session. It looked early that it was going to be a tough long fight for Silva and Sonnen dominated him on the mat most of the round.

By the second round, Silva turned the fight around and came back strong. He made Sonnen miss badly causing him to slip and he hit him with a knee to the body. Sonnen was hurt by the knee and tried hanging on, but Silva kept the barrage going with a mixture of shots eventually leading to the technical knockout with Sonnen left beat up on the mat.

In the co-feature, Forrest Griffin defeated Tito Ortiz by decision. It was a close fight with some good action. Fans in attendance seemed to favor Ortiz as the winner, but there was a lot of back and forth making it difficult to score. Both fighters showed heart in the match up and it was supposed to be the final fight for Ortiz.

Fight Night Blog will be posting round by round updates of the UFC 148 pay per view main event Anderson Silva vs Chael Sonnen on the FNB Facebook Page and a full recap will be posted later on the website. Results of other televised PPV bouts will also be posted as they come in. Follow Fight Night Blog for MMA and Boxing.

Silva gave Sonnen a shoulder bump during the weigh in yesterday that caused a little stir among some fans.

Fortuna made his opponenet look outmatched from the beginning with much better hand speed and power to go with it. Cruz was knocked down in the first round from a flurry of punches. In round two, the southpaw Fortuna caught him with a short powerful left hand that caused the referee to call the TKO when Cruz barely wobbled up to his feet with a bloody nose.

Cornelies "K-9" Bundrage (32-4) battered Cory Spinks (39-7) in their rematch for a TKO win in round seven of the main event on ShoBox for the IBF light middleweight championship. Spinks looked really out of sorts and his legs were jello from the opening bell. Bundrage was rugged as usual, but still has a monstrous right hand. Spinks was hit by a sledgehammer overhand right from Bundrage late in the first round that dropped him. Rest of the fight was very sloppy, but Spinks did manage to get some connects and land body shots albeit with little power. By round seven, K-9 was landing solid right hands with this time dropping Spinks three times in the round which caused the referee to stop the fight.

Former Olympian Gary Russell Jr (20-0) made a quick night of Christopher Perez (23-3) with a third round knock out victory in the featherweight match. The speed and combinations were too much for the outmatched Perez. Russell knocked down Perez three times with the last one putting him through the ropes. He had knockdowns with both his right hook and straight left.

The first bout of the night was competitive with a solid unanimous decision win for light middleweight Erislandy Lara (17-1-1) over Freddy Hernandez (30-3). Lara used his boxing skills and hand speed to run the show. It did get interesting in the sixth when Hernandez was verbally challenging his opponent to fight after Lara did an awkward move featuring a double punch and headbutt all in one. In round seven, Hernandez suffered another headbutt that this time caused a cut and Lara was deducted a point. Lara coasted the rest of the way while Hernandez slowed late in the fight.

Light welterweight Ruslan Provodnikov (22-1) wasted no time on the ESPN Friday Night Fights main event with a knock out of Jose Reynoso (16-4-1) in round two. The Russian hammered Reynoso with hard shots including some good body punches and ended the fight with a sweeping right to the head. Provodnikov dominated his outclassed opponent as expected.

The co-feature was also an entertaining fight. Junior featherweight Christopher Martin (24-2-3) defeated Roberto Castaneda (20-2) by knockout in round six via a body shot. Martin started out very slow and was mostly just throwing pop shots while Castaneda was outworking him. By round five, Castaneda slowed and Martin found his weak spot which was the body. Late in the fifth, Martin dropped him with a right uppercut to the solar plexus and went back to the body in round six with a left hook to the liver that finished him off.

Rich Franklin defeated Wanderlei Silva by unanimous decision in the UFC 147 main event. Franklin used his movement and jab to stay in control most of the fight, but there were good moments of action and Silva almost had a knockout victory in round two. Round by round updates were also provided on the Fight Night Blog Facebook page.

Round one started off slow with occasional strikes landing by both men and was difficult to score. In the second, Franklin was moving forward while Silva was content on countering. It looked like Franklin was beginning to gain control until Silva rocked him with repeated hard shots including dropping him with a knee and a straight right hand while finishing the round with some ground and pound.

Franklin barely made it through the second, but in the third, he regained his composure. Franklin used movement by constant circling and jabbing to control the fight. During the last seconds of the final round, they went wild throwing punches and Silva was clipped with a left from Franklin around the final bell. Final scorecards were all 29-26 for Franklin.